Skip to main content

Blog

The Mental Health Benefits of an Inclusive Outdoor Escape [nytimes.com]

By Alisha Haridasani Gupta, Photo: Logan Lynette for The New York Times , The New York Times, July 7, 2022 For Cynthia Philips, it was the sound of bees, willows, crickets and the hum of a metallic Tibetan bowl that helped her overcome some of her anxieties. Over Memorial Day weekend, Ms. Philips, a 64-year-old entrepreneur, drove out to a Black-owned ranch in Crawfordville, Ga. where she joined dozens of other women for a camping trip. Tents were set up under large, majestic trees and...

The cult of confidence: could positive thinking be making us feel less secure? [theguardian.com]

By Eleanor Morgan, Illustration: Janice Chang/The Observer , The Guardian, July 10, 2022 B elieve in yourself. Be empowered. Show up. Love your body. Stand tall. How many times have you seen statements like these on social media? Or used to advertise products? All point towards confidence: a particular c-word that the modern woman cannot get away from. Being self-confident is the command of our time. At some point in the past decade, women’s media seemed to shift from celebrity mockery and...

As temperatures rise, this research could help cities stay cool [washingtonpost.com]

By Lori Aratani, Image: the University of Arizona, The Washington Post, July 8, 2022 A growing number of cities are searching for strategies to offset the effects of higher temperatures on their communities. In the D.C. region, eight of the 10 hottest summers on record have occurred since 2010, according to The Washington Post’s Capital Weather Gang. Ladd Keith is an assistant professor of planning and sustainable-built environments at the University of Arizona’s College of Architecture,...

Register Now! Cooperative of Communities and the RYSE Center Present: Radical Inquiry Session

Join the RYSE Center and PACEs Connection on July 12. 2022 from 10 am-1 pm PT / 12 pm-3 pm CT / 1 pm-4 pm ET to examine how conventional social science research often produces and replicates unjust and harmful narratives about Black, Indigenous, Youth of Color (BIPOC) capacities, priorities, dreams, and needs. At the same time, research upholds and enables white, middle-class norms and values as the standard of achievement, success, and health. From the website: “RYSE works to reimagine,...

Man who reveals he was 'almost a school shooter' reveals what stopped him [CNN.com]

https://www.cnn.com/videos/us/...ate-brown-nr-vpx.cnn “…abuse at home…” “I grew up in a really painful and violent house…” “…having the people I was closest to be the ones who hurt me most.” “A bigger issue was love. I had a severe lack of love…” “I was raised— told I was worthless, told I was nothing and when you’re told you’re worthless you believe it.” "I was either going to shoot the mall food court or my school food court but the victims were actually incidental...It wasn’t really about...

The Traumatic Stress Institute (TSI) is Hiring!

Now hiring 2 Program Coordinators to offer training and consultation services The Traumatic Stress Institute already supports more than 85 organizational clients throughout North America with its Whole-System Change Model to Trauma-Informed Care, which includes the Risking Connection Training . Now TSI is adding two staff to support its increasing number of organizational clients. One of the two positions will assume primary responsibility for Intellectual and Developmental Disability (IDD)...

Heat as an ACE & what rising temperatures mean for us

This is the first of multiple articles about heat, its impact on us, and what we can do to protect our communities. It’s hot, and it’s getting hotter. Last month in the United States, over half the population was under heat alerts . In the Southwest, the National Weather Service warned of a “dangerous and deadly heat wave” . No matter where you live in the world, data shows that global surface temperatures have increased year over year . In fact, the three hottest years on record all have...

Debunking the Kubler-Ross Five Stages of Grief

It's the middle of the night. My Nokia cell phone vibrates me awake somewhere under the covers, and I manage to locate it just enough to hit silent. A few moments later, the vibrating is present again. This time I look to see that it's my brother in a time zone three hours behind me, but it will have to wait until tomorrow. I'm just too sleepy. The third round of vibration begins. "Alright, I better answer this"…. Me: "Hello?" Brother: "Mom's dead! Mom's dead!" (Heaving and sobbing). What...

The Healing Power of Strength Training [nytimes.com]

By Danielle Friedman, Photo: Vanessa Leroy/The New York Times, The New York Times, July 7, 2022 When Cheng Xu was serving in the Canadian Armed Forces as a paratrooper and infantry officer, he experienced a series of traumatic events in rapid succession — his best friend and fellow officer took his own life, a soldier under his command was injured during a live fire exercise and a close friend’s father was kidnapped. He felt like the world was collapsing around him everywhere except at the...

Poor physical and mental health among older adults linked to childhood abuse history [medicalxpress.com]

By University of Toronto, Photo: Pixabay, Medical Xpress, July 7, 2022 Older adults who were physically abused as children were significantly more likely to develop chronic pain and chronic physical illness in later life according to a newly-released study by University of Toronto researchers. They were also twice as likely to develop depression and anxiety disorders compared to those without this early trauma. "Sadly, our findings suggest that the traumatic experience of childhood physical...

College or career? California invests $500 million in program that tackles both [edsource.org]

By Emma Gallegos, Photo: Kerin Coffey, EdSource, July 7, 2022 A question that has long vexed American secondary education is whether to prepare students for college or a career. With the creation of the Golden State Pathways Program, California has decided to invest in both. The state budget sets aside $500 million in competitive grants to establish a new program to ensure students “ advance seamlessly from high school to college and career.” Its goal is to help students transition from high...

Behavioral issues, absenteeism at schools increase, federal data shows [washingtonpost.com]

By Donna St. George, Photo: Damian Dovarganes/AP, The Washington Post, July 6, 2022 The data, collected as the 2021-2022 school year was winding down, also showed that more than 70 percent of schools saw increases in chronic student absenteeism since the onset of the pandemic and about half of schools reported increased acts of disrespect toward teachers and staff. “The survey paints a remarkably coherent picture,” said Kevin Welner, a professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder and...

What Happened to You? and What Happened to Me?

Last spring, I attended a virtual book discussion of Oprah Winfrey and Dr. Bruce Perry's book "What Happened to You?". It was while we (or at least I) were still pretty locked down with the pandemic. I was working from home, living alone, seeing family but only seeing friends and colleagues virtually. The event hosted by Dax Shephard and Kristin Bell inspired me to read the book. It also inspired me to bring the book to our Georgia communities. I knew that I was not the only person...

Meet Our Newest Faculty Member - MyDzung Chu [positiveexperience.org/category/blog]

By MyDzung Chu, 7/7/22, https://positiveexperience.org/category/blog/ Meet MyDzung Chu, our newest faculty member at the Center for Community Engaged Medicine, working alongside the HOPE team! She shares how she first heard about HOPE and the projects she will be working on with the team. Can you tell us about your role at Tufts Medical Center? Hi everyone. I am an environmental and occupational epidemiologist. I am also a first-generation Vietnamese-American woman and a native of...

Post
Copyright © 2023, PACEsConnection. All rights reserved.
×
×
×
×